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Science Forum Index » Astronomy Forum » Tesla: Still Unequaled!
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| Double-A |
Posted: Sat Apr 19, 2008 10:48 am |
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Guest
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"Nikola Tesla was the foremost scientist, inventor, and electrical
genius of his day and has been unequaled since."
"Although never publicly credited, Nikola Tesla invented radio and the
coil bearing his name, which invloves most of the concepts in radio
theory."
"the man almost single handedly invented the twentieth century."
"the inventory of twentieth century industry. Virtually every
significant electrical invention of the twentieth century can be
linked directly to Tesla's work on AC power and radio."
- Quotes from "The Ultimate Tesla Coil Design and Construction Guide"
by Mitch Tilbury.
Double-A |
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| oldcoot |
Posted: Sat Apr 19, 2008 12:46 pm |
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On Apr 19, 1:48 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
Quote: "Nikola Tesla was the foremost scientist, inventor, and electrical
genius of his day and has been unequaled since."
"Although never publicly credited, Nikola Tesla invented radio and the
coil bearing his name, which invloves most of the concepts in radio
theory."
"the man almost single handedly invented the twentieth century."
"the inventory of twentieth century industry. Virtually every
significant electrical invention of the twentieth century can be
linked directly to Tesla's work on AC power and radio."
- Quotes from "The Ultimate Tesla Coil Design and Construction Guide"
by Mitch Tilbury.
Double-A
Yup. And Tesla never wavered from the reality of the spatial medium
and the fact that matter is a secondary derivative of it.. which no
doubt contributed to his pariah-hood. |
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| Saul Levy |
Posted: Sat Apr 19, 2008 6:14 pm |
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Electric rockets, DA?
Saul Levy
On Sat, 19 Apr 2008 13:48:56 -0700 (PDT), Double-A
<double-a2@hush.com> wrote:
Quote: "Nikola Tesla was the foremost scientist, inventor, and electrical
genius of his day and has been unequaled since."
"Although never publicly credited, Nikola Tesla invented radio and the
coil bearing his name, which invloves most of the concepts in radio
theory."
"the man almost single handedly invented the twentieth century."
"the inventory of twentieth century industry. Virtually every
significant electrical invention of the twentieth century can be
linked directly to Tesla's work on AC power and radio."
- Quotes from "The Ultimate Tesla Coil Design and Construction Guide"
by Mitch Tilbury.
Double-A |
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| Double-A |
Posted: Sun Apr 20, 2008 10:45 am |
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On Apr 19, 4:14 pm, Saul Levy <saulle...@cox.net> wrote:
Quote: Electric rockets, DA?
Saul Levy
On Sat, 19 Apr 2008 13:48:56 -0700 (PDT), Double-A
double...@hush.com> wrote:
"Nikola Tesla was the foremost scientist, inventor, and electrical
genius of his day and has been unequaled since."
"Although never publicly credited, Nikola Tesla invented radio and the
coil bearing his name, which invloves most of the concepts in radio
theory."
"the man almost single handedly invented the twentieth century."
"the inventory of twentieth century industry. Virtually every
significant electrical invention of the twentieth century can be
linked directly to Tesla's work on AC power and radio."
- Quotes from "The Ultimate Tesla Coil Design and Construction Guide"
by Mitch Tilbury.
Double-A
Ion diive.
Double-A |
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| Double-A |
Posted: Sun Apr 20, 2008 10:46 am |
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Guest
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On Apr 19, 3:46 pm, oldcoot <oldcoot7...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 19, 1:48 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
"Nikola Tesla was the foremost scientist, inventor, and electrical
genius of his day and has been unequaled since."
"Although never publicly credited, Nikola Tesla invented radio and the
coil bearing his name, which invloves most of the concepts in radio
theory."
"the man almost single handedly invented the twentieth century."
"the inventory of twentieth century industry. Virtually every
significant electrical invention of the twentieth century can be
linked directly to Tesla's work on AC power and radio."
- Quotes from "The Ultimate Tesla Coil Design and Construction Guide"
by Mitch Tilbury.
Double-A
Yup. And Tesla never wavered from the reality of the spatial medium
and the fact that matter is a secondary derivative of it.. which no
doubt contributed to his pariah-hood.
What term did Wolter use to refer to the spatial medium. Not not
aether?
Double-A |
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| oldcoot |
Posted: Sun Apr 20, 2008 11:36 am |
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On Apr 20, 1:46 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
Quote:
What term did Wolter use to refer to the spatial medium. Not not
aether?
No, he totally eschewed it as an archaic term that needs to be struck
from the dictionary due to the stigma it carries. He called it simply
the "super energy-dense matrix of space", with the implicit proviso
that its wavelength-state or 'granularity' is sub-Planckian, below our
EM and sensory resolution, hence our perception of it as "void".
After his passing and with the advent of the internet,
I tried presenting his cosmogony as best i understood it. Immediately
there arose yowls and howls that i was trying to resurrect the "aether
theory". In exasperation i changed the term to 'vacuum energy density'
or VED, striving for a term to describe the energy density of space
while preserving the integrity of the "vacuum". Later when Painius
came on the scene, we got to brainstorming for a better term that
properly *defines* as well as describes the spatial medium. He came up
with 'Sub-Planck(ian) Energy Domain' with the acronym SPED. And that's
what it's been ever since. |
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| oldcoot |
Posted: Sun Apr 20, 2008 11:41 am |
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P.S.
Ain't it a hoot watching this other new thread "What
is ether?" |
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| Saul Levy |
Posted: Mon Apr 21, 2008 1:04 am |
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Yes!
Saul Levy
On Sun, 20 Apr 2008 13:45:35 -0700 (PDT), Double-A
<double-a2@hush.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 19, 4:14 pm, Saul Levy <saulle...@cox.net> wrote:
Electric rockets, DA?
Saul Levy
On Sat, 19 Apr 2008 13:48:56 -0700 (PDT), Double-A
double...@hush.com> wrote:
"Nikola Tesla was the foremost scientist, inventor, and electrical
genius of his day and has been unequaled since."
"Although never publicly credited, Nikola Tesla invented radio and the
coil bearing his name, which invloves most of the concepts in radio
theory."
"the man almost single handedly invented the twentieth century."
"the inventory of twentieth century industry. Virtually every
significant electrical invention of the twentieth century can be
linked directly to Tesla's work on AC power and radio."
- Quotes from "The Ultimate Tesla Coil Design and Construction Guide"
by Mitch Tilbury.
Double-A
Ion diive.
Double-A |
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| Painius |
Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 5:55 pm |
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"oldcoot" <oldcoot7074@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message...
news:a29dae94-0592-4ff5-9d0e-17b08baff590@w1g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
Quote: On Apr 20, 1:46 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
What term did Wolter use to refer to the spatial medium. Not not
aether?
No, he totally eschewed it as an archaic term that needs to be struck
from the dictionary due to the stigma it carries. He called it simply
the "super energy-dense matrix of space", with the implicit proviso
that its wavelength-state or 'granularity' is sub-Planckian, below our
EM and sensory resolution, hence our perception of it as "void".
After his passing and with the advent of the internet,
I tried presenting his cosmogony as best i understood it. Immediately
there arose yowls and howls that i was trying to resurrect the "aether
theory". In exasperation i changed the term to 'vacuum energy density'
or VED, striving for a term to describe the energy density of space
while preserving the integrity of the "vacuum". Later when Painius
came on the scene, we got to brainstorming for a better term that
properly *defines* as well as describes the spatial medium. He came up
with 'Sub-Planck(ian) Energy Domain' with the acronym SPED. And that's
what it's been ever since.
Nikola who? <g>
happy days and...
starry starry nights!
--
Indelibly yours,
Paine
P.S. Thank YOU for reading!
P.P.S. (shh) Some secret sites...
http://painellsworth.net
http://savethechildren.org
http://eBook-eDen.secretsgolden.com |
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| Double-A |
Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:17 am |
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On Apr 26, 3:55 pm, "Painius" <starswirlern...@maol.com> wrote:
Quote: "oldcoot" <oldcoot7...@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message...
news:a29dae94-0592-4ff5-9d0e-17b08baff590@w1g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 20, 1:46 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
What term did Wolter use to refer to the spatial medium. Not not
aether?
No, he totally eschewed it as an archaic term that needs to be struck
from the dictionary due to the stigma it carries. He called it simply
the "super energy-dense matrix of space", with the implicit proviso
that its wavelength-state or 'granularity' is sub-Planckian, below our
EM and sensory resolution, hence our perception of it as "void".
After his passing and with the advent of the internet,
I tried presenting his cosmogony as best i understood it. Immediately
there arose yowls and howls that i was trying to resurrect the "aether
theory". In exasperation i changed the term to 'vacuum energy density'
or VED, striving for a term to describe the energy density of space
while preserving the integrity of the "vacuum". Later when Painius
came on the scene, we got to brainstorming for a better term that
properly *defines* as well as describes the spatial medium. He came up
with 'Sub-Planck(ian) Energy Domain' with the acronym SPED. And that's
what it's been ever since.
Nikola who? <g
If it hadn't been for Tesla, we would still require a local coal-fired
dynamo in every neighborhood to produce the Edison direct current for
out homes. DC cannot be transmitted long distances as Tesla's AC
can. There would have been no possibility for rural electrification.
Farmers would still have to depend on wind chargers and car batteries
for their electrical needs. Television wouldn't have been invented,
becase is needs a fly coil, which is a version of a Tesla coil. You
would be going home to enjoy 1000 channels on your cable RADIO
tonight!
Double-A |
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| Saul Levy |
Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 2:21 pm |
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It's Ricola, Paine! The cough drop. lmao!
Saul Levy
On Sat, 26 Apr 2008 22:55:09 GMT, "Painius" <starswirlernosp@maol.com>
wrote:
Quote: "oldcoot" <oldcoot7074@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message...
news:a29dae94-0592-4ff5-9d0e-17b08baff590@w1g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 20, 1:46 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
What term did Wolter use to refer to the spatial medium. Not not
aether?
No, he totally eschewed it as an archaic term that needs to be struck
from the dictionary due to the stigma it carries. He called it simply
the "super energy-dense matrix of space", with the implicit proviso
that its wavelength-state or 'granularity' is sub-Planckian, below our
EM and sensory resolution, hence our perception of it as "void".
After his passing and with the advent of the internet,
I tried presenting his cosmogony as best i understood it. Immediately
there arose yowls and howls that i was trying to resurrect the "aether
theory". In exasperation i changed the term to 'vacuum energy density'
or VED, striving for a term to describe the energy density of space
while preserving the integrity of the "vacuum". Later when Painius
came on the scene, we got to brainstorming for a better term that
properly *defines* as well as describes the spatial medium. He came up
with 'Sub-Planck(ian) Energy Domain' with the acronym SPED. And that's
what it's been ever since.
Nikola who? <g |
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| oldcoot |
Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 3:52 pm |
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On Apr 30, 2:17 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
Quote:
If it hadn't been for Tesla, we would still require a local coal-fired
dynamo in every neighborhood to produce the Edison direct current for
out homes. DC cannot be transmitted long distances as Tesla's AC
can. There would have been no possibility for rural electrification.
Farmers would still have to depend on wind chargers and car batteries
for their electrical needs. Television wouldn't have been invented,
becase is needs a fly coil, which is a version of a Tesla coil. You
would be going home to enjoy 1000 channels on your cable RADIO
tonight!
In an interesting turn of events, DC is found superior to AC for very
long distance power transmission at ultrahigh voltage (upwards of
600KVDC). High voltage AC sent over long distances encounters
capacitive reactance in the lines and radiative losses, which is
eliminated using DC. If interested, Google 'Ultra high voltage DC
power transmission'. In this one instance at least, 'ol Thomas
Edison's fixation on DC has trumped both Tesla and Westinghouse.
oc |
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| G=EMC^2 Glazier |
Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 8:17 am |
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oc Future homes having photo-electric cells on roof a wind mill and
large cadmium battery might prove Edison was right after all. Bert |
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| Double-A |
Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 10:38 am |
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Guest
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On Apr 30, 2:17 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 26, 3:55 pm, "Painius" <starswirlern...@maol.com> wrote:
"oldcoot" <oldcoot7...@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message...
news:a29dae94-0592-4ff5-9d0e-17b08baff590@w1g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 20, 1:46 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
What term did Wolter use to refer to the spatial medium. Not not
aether?
No, he totally eschewed it as an archaic term that needs to be struck
from the dictionary due to the stigma it carries. He called it simply
the "super energy-dense matrix of space", with the implicit proviso
that its wavelength-state or 'granularity' is sub-Planckian, below our
EM and sensory resolution, hence our perception of it as "void".
After his passing and with the advent of the internet,
I tried presenting his cosmogony as best i understood it. Immediately
there arose yowls and howls that i was trying to resurrect the "aether
theory". In exasperation i changed the term to 'vacuum energy density'
or VED, striving for a term to describe the energy density of space
while preserving the integrity of the "vacuum". Later when Painius
came on the scene, we got to brainstorming for a better term that
properly *defines* as well as describes the spatial medium. He came up
with 'Sub-Planck(ian) Energy Domain' with the acronym SPED. And that's
what it's been ever since.
Nikola who? <g
If it hadn't been for Tesla, we would still require a local coal-fired
dynamo in every neighborhood to produce the Edison direct current for
out homes. DC cannot be transmitted long distances as Tesla's AC
can. There would have been no possibility for rural electrification.
Farmers would still have to depend on wind chargers and car batteries
for their electrical needs. Television wouldn't have been invented,
becase is needs a fly coil, which is a version of a Tesla coil. You
would be going home to enjoy 1000 channels on your cable RADIO
tonight!
Double-A
Oh I forgot. Tesla invented radio too! But you could still enjoy
your Edison victrola with those stacks of one sided, thick 78
records. Don't drop them. They break!
Double-A |
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| Double-A |
Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 10:42 am |
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On Apr 30, 6:52 pm, oldcoot <oldcoot7...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Quote: On Apr 30, 2:17 pm, Double-A <double...@hush.com> wrote:
If it hadn't been for Tesla, we would still require a local coal-fired
dynamo in every neighborhood to produce the Edison direct current for
out homes. DC cannot be transmitted long distances as Tesla's AC
can. There would have been no possibility for rural electrification.
Farmers would still have to depend on wind chargers and car batteries
for their electrical needs. Television wouldn't have been invented,
becase is needs a fly coil, which is a version of a Tesla coil. You
would be going home to enjoy 1000 channels on your cable RADIO
tonight!
In an interesting turn of events, DC is found superior to AC for very
long distance power transmission at ultrahigh voltage (upwards of
600KVDC). High voltage AC sent over long distances encounters
capacitive reactance in the lines and radiative losses, which is
eliminated using DC. If interested, Google 'Ultra high voltage DC
power transmission'. In this one instance at least, 'ol Thomas
Edison's fixation on DC has trumped both Tesla and Westinghouse.
oc
Resistance is the main problem to long range DC transmission. I
suppose a igh enough voltage might overcome that. But you would have
to convert it back to AC to be able to step it down to a useful
voltage. The Edison system as it existed wouldn't go far.
Double-A |
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